Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

iPad-Window on the World

Kevin Kelly, writing in the April issue of Wired magazine, doesn't want you to think of the iPad as a tablet.

It's a window you carry.

Kelly finds that there are two things that distinguish the iPad from laptops and smart phones:

  1. They are mobile screens meant to move. Not just a full color, hi-res super ebook reader, it's about moving images, text, music, watching and making videos. The iPad is a TV you read, a book you watch, and movies you touch.
  2. The tablet window goes two ways. You watch, it watches you. It's made for interaction: swoosh your fingers to scroll, wave your arms (like a Wii), or tilt it.
In this window, we embrace the world, and it embraces us.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

One Laptop Per Child

Some friends and members of our community group have been supporters of One Laptop Per Child for quite some time. The idea behind OLPC is simply brilliant:

The OLPC project aimed at building a $100 laptop, able to operate for at least five years in a developing country. To achieve this, the team of designers assembled by Nicholas Negroponte was able to embed in the XO-1, a light and compact object weighing just 1.5 kg, a concentration of innovative technological solutions, absent even in high-end laptops, including:



  • An open source operating system called Sugar, derived from Linux, specifically designed to stimulate learning in a collaborative environment, promoting co-production and sharing of multimedia content.

  • A wireless connection system, known as mesh networking ,which allows the XO-1 laptop to automatically connect with other geographically-close laptops, without any user interaction. To remedy the lack of internet connections, the connection of a single laptop can be automatically shared by all those involved in the mesh network, even miles away. The peculiar antennas located on the lid of XO-1, which remind the children of a rabbit’s ears, allow each laptop to communicate with others within a radius of 1 km.


  • The ability to transform the XO-1, with a simple twist of the screen, in an eBook reader. Each laptop can store hundreds of eBooks, and can share them with all other nodes in the network. What’s more, the screen is configured to switch from a high-resolution color mode, to a monochrome high-contrast mode, which allows one to read even when the screen is exposed to the sun and reduces battery consumption (in eBook mode the batteries can last up to 24 hours).


  • Unparalleled energy efficiency: with an absorption of between 3 and 6W, compared with more than 100W of a traditional laptop, the XO-1 is one of the most efficient computers, and can be recharged even where no electricity grid is available, using chargers that exploit the sun or other alternate energy sources.


  • The ability to operate in extreme conditions: the XO-1 has no moving parts (HD, fan, CD-DVD) or holes which could allow the infiltration of sand or dust, and can withstand a storm. The mechanical parts are designed so that the repair is very simple and can be performed directly by the little users, thus becoming itself a moment of collaborative learning.
The cost of this masterpiece of innovation is currently about $200: the number of orders, the devaluation of the dollar and the rising in raw material costs prevented its creators, for the moment, to lower the price below the psychological threshold of $100.


Nicholas Negroponte, founder of OLPC, thinks that the changes being ushered in by the iPad are going to be a tremendous benefit to the nearly 2 billion kids in the world who don't have access to books, a library, and in many cases, no schools or electricity.

In the April issue of Wired magazine (of which Negropone was the first investor), he writes on how the iPad can evolve into the device that will push the OLPC idea toward reality.

Simply amazing...

Monday, April 12, 2010

Will the iPad Change Everything?

I haven't bought into all the iPad hype, but like many things Apple has rolled out, this one is going to be a game-changer.

Except on a whole new playing field.

From the rollout announcement last January to the huge amount of sales the day they became available on April 3, Apple's iPad has been dominating the news. On the surface, it's a simple product: an always-on tablet device that lets you browse the Web, read books, send email, watch movies and play games. That surface, though, is really one of what author Jeffrey Kluger calls "simplexity."

Apple has, once again, made a complex thing simple.

In an article from the April issue of Wired magazine, Steven Levy chronicles how the iPad is going to change things - from the way we read books to the way we play games to the way we do business - and everything in-between.

An illustration: my pastor used a brand new iPad for his sermon notes on Easter Sunday - and then gave it away to a new Christian high school student. It came preloaded with a Bible, study guides, and worship music from our band. In his sermon a week later, my pastor is using his personal iPad for sermon notes again.

Which brings me to my posts of the last few days. My grandson Jack (and my next grandchild, to be born in September) are going to be growing up in a whole different world than their parents did. Wired editor-in-chief had a great description of this world of the tablet: "Bigger than a phone, funner than a laptop, more cuddly than a Kindle."

Welcome to a new world.